PORTSMOUTH PEACE TREATY
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the path to peace

Multi-Track Diplomacy
Multi-track diplomacy was employed by the people of Portsmouth and the State of New Hampshire during the thirty days of negotiations of the Treaty of Portsmouth. In between the formal direct negotiations, the people of Portsmouth hosted informal meetings, recreational and social events throughout the local area to foster interpersonal relations between the Russian and Japanese delegations. This form of peace negotiation is becoming a new, broader approach to resolving international conflicts, especially when the parties want no formal government as an intermediary between the two. Portsmouth is a sterling example of this process before scholarship identified the name Multi-Track Diplomacy.
The term "Track Two Diplomacy" was coined in 1981 by Joseph Montville, referring to the range of unofficial contact between negotiating parties and people to enhance and move forward the peace process. Montville, then a U.S. diplomat, used the term in contrast to Track One diplomacy, which refers to diplomatic efforts to resolve conflicts only through governmental channels.

By 1991 it became clear that conflict resolution was too complex in the modern world for two tracks to successfully negotiate an outcome of peace. This evolution of diplomacy and negotiating theory led Dr. Louise Diamond and Amb. John McDonald to coin the term "Multi-Track Diplomacy". This term was an advance on two-track theory to incorporate a number of different ways that peace could be reached through various channels.

Multi-Track Diplomacy, broadly defined refers to nine different "tracks" that all contribute to international peace and conflict resolution:
  • Track One: Governments
  • Track Two: Business
  • Track Three: Private citizens
  • Track Four: Educators
  • Track Five: Peace activists
  • Track Six: Religion
  • Track Seven: The funding community
  • Track Eight: Media
  • Track Nine: Coordination. Each track in itself contributes to resolving the conflict however they are best used in a coordinated effort.

The value of the multi-track approach to conflict resolution is that often the unofficial contacts can diffuse much of the conflict before the negotiations begin. The unofficial contacts can build bridges and relationships to develop trust and foster mutual understanding. These channels also reverse the dehumanization of conflict and put a human face on each enemy making it more easily develops personal understanding and trust. Often the de-escalation that results from such contacts is necessary, before official negotiations will be considered politically possible.
A diagram based on the principles of Edward Tufte, who said that good graphics must present their message as simply as possible, was created in 2005 by Portsmouth architect Patrick Stevens to illustrate the multi-track diplomacy employed in the negotiations that resulted in the Portsmouth Peace Treaty. The diagram maps, day by day, the concurrent tracks in the negotiations: Theodore Roosevelt's back channel diplomacy at the top, the twelve demands of the formal negotiations in the middle and the activities of local citizens hoping to keep the negotiators at the table at the bottom. Note that when the formal negotiation track stalled, the social activities of citizen diplomacy increased.  
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  • Join
    • Japan-America Society of NH
    • Russia Society of NH
  • History
    • Maps >
      • Russo-Japanese War
      • Treaty Articles
    • Causes of the War
    • War
    • Ready for Peace
    • Places
    • Portsmouth Hosts Conference
    • Negotiations
    • Crisis & Citizen Diplomacy
    • Peace >
      • The Principals
    • Legacy
  • TR's Nobel Peace Prize
  • Treaty Exhibits
    • Exhibit Catalogue
    • Children's Museum
    • Russian 1913 Photographs
    • SAACC NHAA Exhibits
    • Diplomats in Portsmouth
  • Treaty Forums
  • Memorial Cherry Trees
  • Portsmouth Peace Treaty Day
  • Resources
    • Portsmouth Peace Treaty Trail
    • Memorial Print
    • Commemoratives
    • Teacher's Guide
    • Path to Peace Diagram
    • Bibliography
    • Library of Congress
  • Connections
    • Carey Creek Farm
    • Concord NH - Chandler
    • Dublin NH - Kaneko
    • Hanover NH - Asakawa
    • Kittery ME - PNSY ADM Mead
    • Kittery Point ME - William Dean Howells
    • Lancaster NH - Denison
    • Manchester NH - Amoskeag Mills
    • Newbury NH - John Hay >
      • Secretary Hay
    • New Castle NH - Wentworth By the Sea
    • York ME - Elizabeth Perkins
    • Spiritual Aspects >
      • Green Acre - Sarah Farmer
      • North Church - Rev. EW Clark
      • Temple Israel >
        • Jewish Delegations to Witte
      • Christ Church - Fr Brine & Hotovitsky
  • Commemorations
    • Peace Treaty Anniversary Committee
    • Centennial 2005 >
      • 2005 Governors Dinner
      • Centennial Concert Series
    • Historical Markers
    • 2016 Anniversaries
    • 110th Anniversary 2015
    • Seacoast Wind Ensemble Concerts >
      • Music of 1905
    • FOMA Award 2024 >
      • Order of the Rising Sun
    • "Flags Over Portsmouth"
    • Images of Japan Photographs
    • "Keeping the Peace"
    • Labor/Portsmouth Peace Treaty Parade
    • National History Day
    • NH Humanities Chautauqua
    • NH Humanities To Go
    • Pontine Theatre Peace of Portsmouth
    • Pecha Kucha "Bloom!"
    • Raylynmor Madame Butterfly
    • Sister Cities: Nichinan & Nihonmatsu
    • PHS Who We Are Mural
    • PPTAC & 120th
  • Media Coverage